Science and Engineering Infrastructure For the 21st Century



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NSF provided $213 million in support of research infrastructure during 1993, while NIH provided $117 million and DoD contributed $106 million. Of the non-federal sources of funding, the largest single source was the contribution from the academic institutions. A sizable contribution of $105 million came from private, non-profit foundations, gifts, bonds, and other donations.


A 1998 NSF survey representing 660 research-performing colleges and universities reveals how these institutions fund capital research construction, in contrast to research instrumentation. Table 2 indicates that, overall, research-performing institutions derived their S&E capital projects funds from three major sources: the Federal government, state and local governments, and institutional resources. Institutional resources consist of private donations, institutional funds, tax-exempt bonds, and other sources.
Table 2. Source of Funds to Construct and Repair/Renovate S&E Research Space: 1996 and 1997

Source of Funds


Percent of funds for new construction

Percent of funds for repair/renovation










Federal Government

9%

9%

State/Local Government

31

26

Institution all Sources

60

65









TOTAL





100%

100%

TOTAL COSTS


$3.1 billion

$1.3 billion

NOTE: Only projects costing $100,000 or more

SOURCE: National Science Foundation/SRS, 1996 Survey of Scientific and Engineering Research Facilities at Colleges and Universities.

The Federal government directly accounted for 9 percent of all construction funds ($271 million) and 9 percent ($121 million) of all repair/renovation funds. Additionally, some Federal funding was provided through indirect cost recovery on grants and/or contracts from the Federal government. These overhead payments are used to defray the indirect costs of conducting Federally funded research and are counted as institutional funding.

Another NSF survey representing 580 research-performing institutions in 2001 provides some information on the current amount, distribution and adequacy of academic research space, which includes laboratories, facilities and major equipment costing at least $1 million.


As Table 3 indicates, in 1988 there were 112 million net assignable square feet (NASF) of S&E research space. By 2001 it had increased by 38 percent to 155 million NASF. Doctorate-granting institutions represented 95 percent of the space, with the top 100 institutions having 71 percent and minority-serving institutions having 5 percent. In addition, 82 percent of institutions surveyed reported inadequate research space, while 51 percent reported a deficit of greater than 25 percent. The greatest deficit was reported by computer sciences, with only 27 percent of the space reported as adequate, and more than double the current space required to make up the perceived deficit. To meet their current research commitments, the research-performing institutions reported that they needed an additional 40 million NASF of S&E research space or 27 percent more than they had.

Table 3. Academic Research Space by S&E Field, 1988-2001


Field

Net assignable square feet (NASF) in millions

% NASF reported as adequate

% additional NASF needed




1988

1992

1996

1999

2001

2001

2001

























All fields......................................................

112

122

136

150

155

29%

27%

Agricultural sciences................................

18

20

22

25

27

30%

11%

Biological sciences..................................

24

28

30

32

33

27%

32%

Computer sciences..................................

1

2

2

2

2

27%

109%

Earth, atmospheric, and ocean .........,,..

6

7

7

8

8

38%

26%

Engineering.............................................

16

18

22

25

26

23%

26%

Medical sciences.....................................

19

22

25

27

28

23%

34%

Physical sciences & mathematics...........

17

17

19

20

20

33%

25%

Psychology & social sciences...............

6

6

7

9

9

38%

32%

Other sciences.......................................

4

2

2

3

3

72%

18%

Note: Components may not add to totals due to rounding.

Source: Survey of Scientific and Engineering Research Facilities, 2001, NSF/SRS.












Maintaining the academic research infrastructure in a modern and effective state over the past decade has been especially challenging because of the increasing cost to construct and maintain research facilities and the concomitant expansion of the research enterprise, with substantially greater numbers of faculty and students engaged in S&E research. The problem is exacerbated by the recurrent Federal funding of research below full economic cost, which has made it difficult for academic institutions to set aside sufficient funds for infrastructure maintenance and replacement.


A recent RAND study estimated that the true cost of facilities and administration (F&A) for research projects is about 31 percent of the total Federal grant. Because of arbitrary caps placed on Federal F&A rates, the share that the Federal government actually pays is between 24 and 28 percent. This amounts to between $0.7 and $1.5 billion in annual costs that are not reimbursed. Moreover, the infrastructure component in negotiated F&A rates has increased since the late 1980s, from under 6 percent in 1988 to almost 9 percent in 1999.6
A recent government study indicated that the Federal government’s contribution to construction funds at the Nation’s research performing colleges and universities has declined since 1990 – from 16 to 9 percent. Colleges and universities picked up the slack by increasing their institutional share from 52 to 60 percent. This includes private donations, which increased from $419 million to $597 million.7
Over the past decade, a number of diverse studies and reports have charted a growing gap between the academic research infrastructure that is needed and the infrastructure that is provided. For example:


  • A 1995 study by the NSTC indicated that the academic research infrastructure in the U.S. is in need of significant renewal, conservatively estimating the facilities and instrumentation needed to make up the deficit at $8.7 billion.8




  • In 1998, an NSF survey estimated costs for deferred capital projects to construct, repair or renovate academic research facilities at $11.4 billion, including $ 7.0 billion to construct new facilities and $4.4 billion to repair/renovate existing facilities.9




  • A 2001 report to the Director, NIH estimated that $5.6 billion was required to address inadequate and/or outdated biomedical research infrastructure. The report recommended new funds for NIH facility improvement grants in FY 2002, a Federal loan guarantee program to support facility construction and renovation, and the removal of arbitrary caps of the Federal F&A rate.10




  • In 2001, the Director of NASA reported a $900 million construction backlog and said that $2 billion more was needed to revitalize and modernize research infrastructure.11




  • A recent study indicated that DoE’s Office of Science laboratories and facilities, many of which are operated by universities, are aging and in disrepair – over 60 percent of the space is over 30 years old. A DoE strategic plan identified over $2 billion of capital investment projects over the next ten years (FY 2002 through FY 2011.)12




  • In FY 2001 an informal survey of NSF directorates and the Office of Polar Programs estimated that future academic S&E infrastructure needs and opportunities through 2010 would cost an additional $18 billion.13




  • An NSF blue-ribbon advisory panel recently estimated that an additional $850 million per year in cyberinfrastructure would be needed to sustain the ongoing revolution in S&E.14

While these surveys and studies provide a rough measure of the magnitude of problem, they say little about the cost of lost S&E opportunities. In a number of critical research fields, the lack of quality infrastructure is limiting S&E progress. For example, the lack of long-term stable support for “wetware” archives is preventing more rapid advances in post-genomic discoveries.




    1. The Importance of Partnerships

As S&E infrastructure projects grow in size, cost and complexity, collaboration and partnerships increasingly enable them. These partnerships increase both the quality of the research enterprise and its impact on the economy and on society. The number of government-funded infrastructure projects that entail international collaboration has increased steadily over the last decade. The very nature of the S&E enterprise is global, often requiring access to geographically dispersed materials, phenomena, and expertise, as well as collaborative logistical support. It also requires open and timely communication, sharing, and validation of findings, data, and data analysis procedures. Projects in areas such as global change, genomics, astronomy, space exploration, and high-energy physics have a global reach and often require expertise and resources that no single country possesses. Further, the increasing cost of large-scale facilities often requires nations to share the expense. NSF currently supports a substantial and growing number of projects with international partnering. Among them are the twin GEMINI Telescopes, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the IceCube South Pole neutrino observatory, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO), the Ocean Drilling Program, and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA).




The Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) is a millimeter wavelength radio telescope consisting of a large number of 12m diameter reflector antennas that will be built on a high (5000 m) site near the village of San Pedro de Atacama, Chile by an international partnership. The U.S. side of the project is run by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), operated by Associated Universities, Inc. under cooperative agreement with the NSF. The international partners include a consortium of European institutions and nations.







ALMA conceptual image courtesy of the European Southern Observatory

In the future, a growing number of large infrastructure projects will be carried out through international collaborations and partnerships. The Internet, the World Wide Web and other large distributed and networked databases will facilitate this trend by channeling new technologies, researchers, users and resources from around the globe. 15.


All large future infrastructure projects should be considered from the perspective of potential international partnering, or at a minimum of close cooperation regarding competing national-scale projects. An additional challenge is maintaining interest in and political support for long-term international projects. Any absence of follow-through on high profile projects could increase the danger of the U.S. becoming known as an unreliable international partner.

Congress has generally been unwilling to set aside multiyear funding for a project at its outset, requiring assiduous efforts by sponsoring agencies to ensure sustained funding.

Interagency coordination of large infrastructure projects is also extremely important. For example, successful management of the U.S. astronomy and astrophysics research enterprise requires close coordination between NASA, NSF, DoD, DoE and many private and state-supported facilities. Likewise, implementation of the U.S. polar research program, which NSF leads, requires the coordination of many Federal agencies and nations. University access to the facilities of many of the national laboratories has been facilitated through interagency agreements. There are a number of models for effective interagency coordination, such as committees and subcommittees of the White House-led NSTC.
In the fields of high-energy and nuclear physics, NSF and DoE have developed an effective scheme that facilitates interagency coordination while simultaneously obtaining outside expert advice. The High Energy Physics Coordination Panel (HEPAP), supported by NSF and DoE, gives advice to the agencies on research priorities, funding levels, and balance, and provides a forum for DoE-NSF joint strategic planning. This scheme has facilitated joint DoE-NSF infrastructure projects. For example, the HEPAP-backed plan for U.S. participation in the European Large Hadron Collider has been credited with making that arrangement succeed.16
Partnerships with the private sector also play an important role in facilitating the construction and operation of S&E infrastructure. For example, much of the equipment available in the Engineering Research Centers and the National Nanofabrication Users Network (NNUN) has been funded by industrial firms. Public-private sector partnerships have also helped to enable the Internet, the Partnerships for Advanced Computational Infrastructure (PACI) and the TeraGrid project.


    1. The Next Dimension

While there have been many significant breakthroughs in infrastructure development over the last decade, nothing has come close to matching the impact of IT and microelectronics. The rapid advances in IT have dramatically changed the way S&E information is gathered, stored, analyzed, presented and communicated. These changes have led to a qualitative, as well as quantitative, change in the way research is performed. Instead of just doing the “old things” cheaper and faster, innovations in information, sensing, and communications are creating new, unanticipated activities, analysis, and knowledge. For example:




  • Simulation of detailed physical phenomena - from subatomic to galactic and all levels in between - is possible; these simulations reveal new understanding of the world, e.g. protein folding and shape, weather, and galaxy formation. Databases and simulations also permit social and behavioral processes research to be conducted in new ways with greater objectivity and finer granularity than ever before.




  • Researchers used to collect and analyze data from their own experiments and laboratories. Now, they can share results in shared archives, such as the protein data bank, and conduct research that utilizes information from vast networked data resources.




  • Automated data analysis procedures of various kinds have been critical to the rapid development of genomics, climate research, astronomy, and other areas, and will certainly play an even greater role with accumulation of ever larger databases.

  • Low-cost sensors, nano-sensors, and high-resolution imaging enable new, detailed data acquisition and analysis across the sciences and engineering – for environmental research, genomics, applications for health, and many other areas.




  • The development of advanced robotics, including autonomous underwater vehicles and robotic aircraft, allow data collection from otherwise inaccessible locations, such as under polar ice. Advanced instrumentation makes it possible to adapt and revise a measuring protocol depending on the data being collected.

Research tools and facilities increasingly include digital computing capabilities. For example, telescopes now produce bits from CCD panels rather than photographs. Particle accelerators, gene sequencers, and seismic sensors, and many other modern S&E tools also produce information bits. As with IT systems generally, these tools depend heavily on hardware and software.


The exponential growth in computing power, communication bandwidth, and data storage capacity will continue for the next decade. Currently, the U.S. Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI) has as its target the development of machines with 100 Teraflop/second capabilities17 by 2005. Soon many researchers will be able to work in the “peta” (1015) range. 18 IT drivers –smaller, cheaper, and faster – will enable researchers in the near future to:


  • Establish shared virtual and augmented reality environments independent of geographical distances between participants and the supporting data and computing systems.




  • Integrate massive data sets, digital libraries, models and analytical tools from many sources.




  • Visualize, simulate and model complex systems such as living cells and organisms, geological phenomena, and social structures.

With the advent of networking, information, computing and communications technologies, the time is approaching where the entire scientific community will have access to these frontier instruments and infrastructure. Many applications have been and are being developed that take advantage of network infrastructure, such as research collaboratories, interactive distributed simulations, virtual reality platforms, control of remote instruments, field work and experiments, access to and visualization of large data sets,19 and distance learning (via connection to infrastructure sites).20


Advances in computational techniques have already radically altered the research landscape in many S&E communities. For example, the biological sciences are undergoing a profound revolution, based largely on the use of genomics data and IT advances. Genomics is now pervading all of biology, and is helping to catalyze an integration of biology with other sciences. Central to genomic sequencing and analysis is access to high-speed computers to store and analyze the enormous amount of data. Automated methods for model search, classification, structure matching, and model estimation and evaluation already have an essential role in genomics and in other complex, data intensive domains, and should come to play a larger role in the social sciences.
The Nation's IT capability has acted like adrenaline to all of S&E. The next step is to build the most advanced research computing infrastructure while simultaneously broadening its accessibility. NSF is presently working toward enabling such a distributed, leading-edge computational capability. Extraordinary advances in the capacity for visualization, simulation, data analysis and interpretation, and robust handling of enormous sets of data are already underway in the first decade of the 21st century. Computational resources, both hardware and software, must be sufficiently large, sufficiently available, and, especially, sufficiently flexible to accommodate unanticipated scientific and engineering demands and applications over the next few decades.


  1. THE ROLE OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION




    1. NSF’s Leadership Role

Among Federal agencies, NSF is a leader in providing the academic research community with access to forefront instrumentation and facilities. This role is conferred upon it by its history and mission. NSF is the only agency charged to broadly promote the progress of science; to advance the National health, prosperity, and welfare; to secure the National defense; and for other purposes.21 While other agencies support S&E infrastructure needed to accomplish their specific missions, only NSF has the broad responsibility to see that the academic research community continues to have access to forefront instrumentation and facilities, to provide the needed research support to utilize them effectively, and to provide timely upgrades to this infrastructure.


Because of its unique responsibilities and mission, NSF must address issues and adopt strategies that are different from other agencies. For example, application mission agencies, such as DoD or DoE, focus primarily on what is enabled by a facility. NSF’s infrastructure investments must also consider other issues, such as the educational impacts of the facility on designers, operators, and students, the balance of support across disciplines and fields, and the development of next-generation instruments. This broad, integrated strategy is reflected in NSF’s three strategic goals, expressed here as outcomes:
People - A diverse, internationally competitive and globally engaged workforce of scientists, engineers, and well-prepared citizens.
Ideas - Discovery across the frontiers of S&E, connected to learning, innovation and service to society.
Tools - Broadly accessible, state-of-the-art and shared research and education tools.
These goals are mutually supportive and each is an essential element of the strategy to ensure the health of the U.S. S&E enterprise. For example, advances in infrastructure go hand-in-hand with scientific progress and workforce development. Research discoveries create the need for new infrastructure and underpin the development of new infrastructure technologies. In turn, infrastructure developments open up new research vistas and help to sustain S&E at the cutting edge. The development of new infrastructure also has an enormous impact on the education of students who will be the next generation of leaders in S&E.
Except for the South Pole Station and the other Antarctic Program facilities, NSF does not directly construct or operate the facilities it supports. Typically, NSF makes awards to external entities, primarily universities, consortia of universities or non-profit organizations, to undertake construction, management and operation of facilities. All infrastructure projects are selected for funding through a competitive and transparent merit review process. NSF retains responsibility for overseeing the development, management and successful performance of the projects. This approach provides the flexibility to adjust to changes in science and technology while providing accountability through efficient and cost-effective management and oversight. An essential added benefit of NSF’s model is the opportunity to train young scientists and engineers by engaging them directly in planning, construction and operation of major facilities and large-scale instrumentation.
Throughout its 50-year history, NSF has enjoyed an extraordinarily successful track record in providing state-of-the-art facilities for S&E research and education. NSF management and oversight have not only enabled the establishment of unique national assets, but have also ensured that they serve the S&E communities and the discovery process as intended. Some of the areas where NSF plays a major (perhaps a dominant) Federal funding role are:


  • Atmospheric and climate change research

  • Digital libraries for S&E

  • Biocomplexity and biodiversity research

  • Exploration of the earth’s mantle

  • Gravitational physics

  • High-performance computing and advanced networking

  • Machine learning and statistics

  • Cognitive psychology

  • Ground-based astronomy

  • Materials research

  • Oceanography

  • Plant genomics

  • Polar research

  • Seismology and earthquake engineering




    1. Establishing Priorities for Large Infrastructure Projects

In establishing infrastructure priorities, the S&E community, in consultation with NSF, develops ideas, considers alternatives, explores partnerships, and develops cost and timeline estimates. By the time a proposal is submitted to NSF, these issues have been thoroughly examined. Upon receipt by NSF, proposals are first subjected to rigorous external peer review, focusing on the criteria of intellectual quality and broader impacts of the project. Only the highest rated proposals undergo a review process that involves subsequently higher levels of NSF management. Proposals that survive this process are reviewed by a top-level NSF panel that makes recommendations to the Director. Projects recommended by the panel for NSF funding must meet all of the following criteria:




  • Provide an exceptional opportunity to enable frontier research and education.

  • Have high priority within the relevant S&E communities and/or support the best interdisciplinary work located in the boundary spaces between disciplines.

  • Are timely (i.e., the right investment at the right time).

  • Are ready to be initiated, in terms of feasibility, engineering cost-effectiveness, interagency and international partnerships, and management.

Projects selected for recommendation to the Director are then grouped as follows: first priority is given to approved projects that have been started but not completed, second priority to projects that have been previously approved by the NSB but not yet started, and third priority to new projects. The panel then ranks the projects within each of these groups in priority order on the basis of the following considerations:




  • How “transformative” is the project? Will it change the way research is conducted or change fundamental S&E concepts/research frontiers?

  • How great are the benefits of the project? How many researchers, educators and students will it enable? Does it broadly serve many disciplines?

  • How pressing is the need? Is there a window of opportunity? Are there interagency and international commitments that must be met?

After considering the strength and substance of the Panel’s recommendations, the balance among various fields and disciplines, and other factors, the Director selects the candidate projects to bring before the National Science Board for consideration. The NSB reviews individual projects on their merits and authorizes the Foundation to pursue the inclusion of selected projects in future budget requests. In August NSF brings a rank ordered list of all approved large facility construction projects to the >NSB, as part of the budget process. The NSB reviews the list and >either approves or argues the order of priority. As part of its budget submission, NSF presents this rank-ordered list of projects (or a subset of it) to OMB. >




    1. Current Programs and Strategies

Table 4 indicates that the FY 2003 budget request for tools totaled $1,122 million, representing about 22.3 percent of the overall NSF budget request. Over the past few years this number has ranged from 22 to 26 percent.


In the category of Research Resources, a range of activities are supported, including multi-user instrumentation; the development of instruments with new capabilities, improved resolution or sensitivity; upgrades to field stations and marine laboratories; support of living stock collections; facility-related instrument development and operation; and the support and development of databases and informatics tools and techniques.

Table 4. NSF Investment in Tools, FY 2001-2003
(Millions of Dollars)

Totals may not add due to rounding.

1 Includes computational sciences, physics, materials research, ocean sciences, atmospheric sciences, and earth sciences facilities, Cornell Electron Storage Ring (CESR), the National High Field Mass Spectrometry Center, the MSU Cyclotron, the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (NHMFL), the Science and Technology Policy Institute (STPI), Science Resources Statistics (SRS), and the National Nanofabrication Users Network (NNUN).
Not included in Table 4 are over 300 NSF-supported research centers receiving a total of $240 million in NSF support and leveraging additional external support of $390 million (mostly university and industrial matching.)22 NSF centers have been outstanding catalysts for the acquisition and deployment of major infrastructure investments. For example, many of the Engineering Research Centers and Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers acquire, maintain and update extensive shared facilities and testbeds, often with major equipment donations from industry partners. These facilities often serve as shared campus-wide, statewide or regional facilities.
Table 5 contains data on NSF’s investment in Tools by major activity: the seven NSF directorates, two offices, and the Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction (MREFC) Account.

Table 5. NSF Tools Expenditures by Major Activity, FY 1998/2002
(Millions of Dollars)


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